Sunday, March 8, 2020

WW2 A Woman's Work is Never Done


In honour of International Women's Day, this is a talk Cultural Manager, Angela Bobier gave in June, 2018 at Living History Weekend.

WW2 A Woman’s Work is Never Done
Western Elgin War Time Farm Life
Sacrifice, Austerity and Thrift

Good morning everyone.  Thank you so much for giving me the chance to share with you WW2 A Woman’s Work is Never Done.  I’m Angela Bobier, Cultural Manager here at Backus-Page House Museum.  At the end I’d be happy to take questions.

You might be wondering what the significance of my outfit is today.  I figured this was my one chance to be Miss Canada.  I’m passing around a picture from the Elgin County Archives showing three young ladies from Rodney in similar attire.  They were part of the Miss Canada Team who went door to door selling victory bonds.  I can only assume the caps they were wearing were red but today I’m wearing my Grandpa Mervyn Foreman’s WW2 army cap. 



During the Second World War, the federal government took control of all fund-raising activities through the War Charities Act of 1939 and the organizers of any event or program were required to secure permission from the Department of National War Services.

The Miss Canada Team would have been organized through this department as well.  Victory Loans also known as Victory Bonds raised money for the war effort.  There were 9 victory loans between June 15, 1941 to November 1945.  Total cash sales were almost $12 billion.  For every $4 invested your return was $5 and your profit didn’t have to be reported on your income tax. 

Rationing & Nutrition
Women also had to deal with Federal interventions in their kitchens, symbolized by the ration book.  I’m passing around some examples of ration books from our area.  Popular slogans were “Food Will Win the War” and food was a “weapon of war”
1.      The first to be branded a patriotic food was the apple.  Promotions included “serve apples daily and you serve your country too”
2.      In 1943 the Nutrition Services Division launched the Canadian Nutrition Program giving Canadians A LOT of nutrition advice. At the heart of this campaign was Canada’s Official Food Rules which listed the six food groups required to maintain a healthy diet:
A.      Milk
B.      cereals and breads,
C.      fruits
D.     vegetables
E.      eggs
F.        “meat, fish, etc.”
As the slogan of the Food Rules reminded Canadians, the goal was straightforward: “Eat right, feel right – Canada needs you strong!” Or, as one headline put it more bluntly, “Canada’s Faulty Diet is Adolf Hitler’s Ally.”
3.      There were thousands of controls on price, production and distribution of everyday food starting in December 1941 followed by the introduction of coupon rationing of sugar in July 1942, tea and coffee in August, butter in December, and meat in March 1943.

Sliced bread and iced cake in bakeries were abolished.  Meatless Tuesdays in restaurants began and between 1945 and 1947, meatless Fridays, as well were established.

Reductions in the production of non-essential goods like chocolate bars and soft drinks (THE HORROR!!), limitations on the number of tin can sizes that could be used from 116 to only 9 standard sizes, as well as the removal of foods like carrots, beets, apples, pork and beans, and spaghetti from the list of foods that could be sold in cans.

One effect was that Canadians were faced with an increasing number of novel food products. The artificial sweetener saccharin became far more common in a range of packaged foods and soybeans entered the Canadian diet in a number of different forms, whether as a substitute for salted peanuts and peanut butter or as a main ingredient in “chocolate” bars.

Women also collected fat and bones in their kitchens when the Department of National War Service instituted a Fats and Bones collection, essential to munitions production. 
Bones are essential to make industrial glues,  
“Fat is Ammunition” – one pound of fat alone supplied “enough glycerine to fire 150 bullets from a Bren gun” and two pounds would “fire a burst of 20 cannon shells from a Spitfire or 10 anti-aircraft shells.”
Canadian housewives could  “be a munition maker right in your own kitchen.”

Victory Gardens
Who’s heard of Victory Gardens before?  They were very popular in WW1.  Normally our kitchen garden here at the museum is 1850s but this year we decided to plant a Victory Garden for this event and something different to talk about on museum tours.  At the garden entrance you can view a copy of a poster on what to plant, when, and in what order. 

I was shocked to learn that there was official discouragement of victory gardening by inexperienced gardeners in the early years of the war.  From the perspective of the Department of Agriculture, inexperienced gardeners were likely to waste valuable commodities in short supply. One 1942 pamphlet produced by the Department even went so far as to actively discourage unskilled “city-folk” from planting food gardens because “they would create the demand for equipment such as garden tools, fertilizers and sprays, which are made from materials needed by Canada’s war industries and because Canada’s vegetable seed supply can best be employed by experienced gardeners with equipment on hand.”

By 1943 and 1944 Victory Gardens were needed and Canadians often took great pride in tending the thousands of new gardens that began to appear on front lawns and vacant lots everywhere in the early years of the war. For victory gardeners, they were an important contribution to the war effort – they freed up agricultural production and shipping space that could be used to send more food to Canada’s allies and they provided a ready supply of fresh, nutritious foods. At its 1944 peak, it was estimated that upwards of 209,200 victory gardens were in operation nationwide producing a total of 57,000 tons of vegetables.

Food Relief campaigns
Women really stepped up to organize food relief campaigns.
Red Cross – food parcels for Allied prisoners of war
Jam for Britain with Red Cross and in partnership with Federated Women’s Institutes and Circles Fermieres
Our Local Women’s Institutes idn West Elgin and Dunwich: wrote letters, knitted caps and gloves, made quilts, sent parcels, sewed pajamas, made jams and jellies, sent honey and condensed milk, made ditty (toiletry) bags for the Navy, salvaged scrap metal, supported local blood donor clinics, and much more.  In the museum’s kitchen is more information compiled by our Summer Assistant Manager, Sabrina Merks.    

Helping family overseas: 
Anyone in Canada who had family overseas was mostly likely VERY worried about them.  Due to shortages many, like my own Grandparents probably sent care packages.  I recently found a letter to my Grandfather, Mervyn Foreman from his sister Doris in Wales.  I’ll read a few portions regarding the shortages in Britain. 

























I don’t know if my Grandparents sent Doris stockings for her wedding or if she managed to find enough ingredients to make a wedding cake.    I do know that Doris married John Rosser on Christmas Eve, 1942 and had two daughters.  I also know that my Grandparents were married on June 30, 1943 75 years ago at St. Peter’s Anglican Church.  There is a small display inside the museum of their wedding certificate, photo and ration cards. 


Please walk through the museum today to see display on the Women’s Institutes, George Henry Backus, Don Hockin, WW2, and our 2018 exhibit of Hats and Trailblazers featuring WW2 veteran Lorne Spicer. 


A War Time Wedding

St. Peter’s Anglican Church, Tyrconnell, was the site for the wedding of Miss Marion Marie Davy to Mr. Mervyn Foreman on June 30, 1943.  Mervyn arrived in Canada from Wales in 1927 and was a Private in the Prince Edward Island Highlanders “Black Watch” stationed at St. John’s New Brunswick and came home to Wallacetown on leave.  Engaged for some time, the war interrupted wedding plans so a wedding was quickly organized. 

John S. Pearce (descendent of original settler, John Pearce) stood as Best Man.  Mervyn had worked as a hired man on the Pearce Farm and other local farms for many years.  Ushers were Morley Page (last resident of Backus-Page House Museum), Clarence Bobier and Johnny Bobier of Wallacetown. 

Marion and Maid of Honour, Ila McArthur, had grown up together.  Marion’s mother, Ida Davy was best friends with Grace Page (of Backus-Page House Museum) and it is likely that Grace assisted with decorating the church.  Iris Page (daughter of Morley and Grace) said her mother was regularly asked to decorate for weddings. 

According to Audrey Littlejohn, the reception was held in Wallacetown at Davy’s Garage and Restaurant, now Small Town Auto.  Currie Road was blocked at Talbot Line and at Argyle Street, so the road could be used for dancing.  Mervyn and Marion lived for a time with her parents, Sam and Ida Davy, after the War until they built their home on Talbot Line in Wallacetown around 1950. 

Mervyn and Marion’s Granddaughter, Angela Foreman-Bobier is now Cultural Manager here at Backus-Page House Museum and is married to John Bobier, great grandson of Clarence Bobier and great great nephew of Johnny Bobier who served as ushers at this War Time Wedding. 

Small Town Connections


Wedding Photograph, Certificate of Marriage and Ration Cards from the personal collection of Angela Foreman-Bobier





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